News
Political commentators got the read on young men very wrong, in part because they would not be swayed from their US-inspired ...
Had he supported the referendum he would have had the best chance of transforming himself into a supportable prime minister ...
If Dutton was leaning into the traditions of Gallipoli, when most Australians were of British descent, Wong was appealing to ...
The family rebellion against Mr Dutton and his party was strongest in his home state of Queensland, where the Coalition lost ...
Labor’s election wipe-out has stalled the arrival of a new generation of Coalition talent to parliament. Their plans in ...
Former opposition leader Peter Dutton’s spectacular fail on return-to-office mandates hasn’t stopped companies from enforcing ...
The Liberal Party abandoned the city voters it lost in 2022 for the suburban voters in 2025. Now it has lost the suburbs.
How can such a modest primary vote produce such a big majority of seats? The PM, long underestimated, ran a brilliant ...
In practice, our elections are a zero-sum game. No matter how unattractive the options, there must be a winner and a loser.
As the Liberals deal with a comprehensive loss at last weekend’s election, there is division inside the party over what went wrong and what to do next.
The minor party is scrambling to select a new leader and is showing little signs of learning any lessons from its defeat.
Shadow treasurer Angus Taylor has officially made his pitch to the Liberal Party to become its next leader, declaring he would bring in more women and “modernise our organisation from the ground up”.
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